Hanging on to hope in troubled times. Ethics of care as foundation for pedagogies of relationality

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Authors

Ritchie, Jenny

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Grantor

Date

2013

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Type

Journal Article

Ngā Upoko Tukutuku (Māori subject headings)

Keyword

arohatanga
wairuatanga
ethics of care
early childhood
climate change
bicultural education

Citation

Ritchie, J. (2013). Ritchie, J. (2013). Hanging on to hope in troubled times. Ethics of care as foundation for pedagogies of relationality. Early Education. 54 (Spring/Summer) : 23-29.

Abstract

As a multiplicity of environmental concerns emerge with increasing frequency and intensity,our awareness of the seriousness of the climate crisis deepens.On a daily basis as we witness the increasingly devastating effects of cyclones, droughts, huge floods and bushfires, along with ocean acidification, ozone depletion, freshwater shortages, species habitat destruction and extinction, chemical pollution, resource depletion, and earthquakes; the repercussion of which are exacerbating the impact on communities of the inequity of resource distribution, poverty, and war. Our reaction to this overwhelming onslaught might be to retreat into our supposedly safe domain as early childhood education practitioners and academics, feel a sense of powerlessness, dismissing these 'matters of concern' (Latour, 2004). Drawing from recent research, this paper focuses on pedagogical strategies to strengthen our relationality as global citizens, in both human and more-than -human realms. These strategies are founded in an ethic of care along with Maori concepts such as arohatanga, kaitiakitanga, manaakitanga and wairuatanga.

Publisher

School of Education, AUT University

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Early Education

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